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Christmas won't be Christmas without any presents, grumbled 6 страница



 

After that, the little brown hood slipped through the hedge

nearly every day, and the great drawing room was haunted by a tuneful

spirit that came and went unseen. She never knew that Mr. Laurence

opened his study door to hear the old-fashioned airs he liked. She

never saw Laurie mount guard in the hall to warn the servants away.

She never suspected that the exercise books and new songs which she

found in the rack were put there for her especial benefit, and when

he talked to her about music at home, she only thought how kind he

was to tell things that helped her so much. So she enjoyed herself

heartily, and found, what isn't always the case, that her granted

wish was all she had hoped. Perhaps it was because she was so grateful

for this blessing that a greater was given her. At any rate she

deserved both.

 

"Mother, I'm going to work Mr. Laurence a pair of slippers. He

is so kind to me, I must thank him, and I don't know any other way.

Can I do it?" asked Beth, a few weeks after that eventful call of his.

 

"Yes, dear. It will please him very much, and be a nice way of

thanking him. The girls will help you about them, and I will pay for

the making up," replied Mrs. March, who took peculiar pleasure in

granting Beth's requests because she so seldom asked anything for

herself.

 

After many serious discussions with Meg and Jo, the pattern was

chosen, the materials bought, and the slippers begun. A cluster of

grave yet cheerful pansies on a deeper purple ground was pronounced

very appropriate and pretty, and Beth worked away early and late, with

occasional lifts over hard parts. She was a nimble little needlewoman,

and they were finished before anyone got tired of them. Then she wrote

a short, simple note, and with Laurie's help, got them smuggled onto

the study table one morning before the old gentleman was up.

 

When this excitement was over, Beth waited to see what would

happen. All day passed and a part of the next before any

acknowledgement arrived, and she was beginning to fear she had offended

her crochety friend. On the afternoon of the second day, she went out

to do an errand, and give poor Joanna, the invalid doll, her daily

exercise. As she came up the street, on her return, she saw three,

yes, four heads popping in and out of the parlor windows, and the

moment they saw her, several hands were waved, and several joyful

voices screamed...

 

"Here's a letter from the old gentleman! Come quick, and read it!"

 

"Oh, Beth, he's sent you..." began Amy, gesticulating with

unseemly energy, but she got no further, for Jo quenched her by

slamming down the window.

 

Beth hurried on in a flutter of suspense. At the door her

sisters seized and bore her to the parlor in a triumphal procession,

all pointing and all saying at once, "Look there! Look there!" Beth

did look, and turned pale with delight and surprise, for there stood

a little cabinet piano, with a letter lying on the glossy lid, directed

like a sign board to "Miss Elizabeth March."

 

"For me?" gasped Beth, holding onto Jo and feeling as if she

should tumble down, it was such an overwhelming thing altogether.

 

"Yes, all for you, my precious! Isn't it splendid of him? Don't

you think he's the dearest old man in the world? Here's the key in

the letter. We didn't open it, but we are dying to know what he says,"

cried Jo, hugging her sister and offering the note.

 

"You read it! I can't, I feel so queer! Oh, it is too lovely!"

and Beth hid her face in Jo's apron, quite upset by her present.

 

Jo opened the paper and began to laugh, for the first words she

saw were...

 

"Miss March:

"Dear Madam--"

 

"How nice it sounds! I wish someone would write to me so!" said

Amy, who thought the old-fashioned address very elegant.

 

"'I have had many pairs of slippers in my life, but I never had

any that suited me so well as yours,'" continues Jo. "'Heartsease is

my favorite flower, and these will always remind me of the gentle



giver. I like to pay my debts, so I know you will allow 'the old

gentleman' to send you something which once belonged to the little

grand daughter he lost. With hearty thanks and best wishes, I remain

"'Your grateful friend and humble servant,

'JAMES LAURENCE'."

 

"There, Beth, that's an honor to be proud of, I'm sure! Laurie

told me how fond Mr. Laurence used to be of the child who died, and

how he kept all her little things carefully. Just think, he's given

you her piano. That comes of having big blue eyes and loving music,"

said Jo, trying to soothe Beth, who trembled and looked more excited

than she had ever been before.

 

"See the cunning brackets to hold candles, and the nice green

silk, puckered up, with a gold rose in the middle, and the pretty

rack and stool, all complete," added Meg, opening the instrument

and displaying its beauties.

 

"'Your humble servant, James Laurence'. Only think of his

writing that to you. I'll tell the girls. They'll think it's

splendid," said Amy, much impressed by the note.

 

"Try it, honey. Let's hear the sound of the baby pianny,"

said Hannah, who always took a share in the family joys and sorrows.

 

So Beth tried it, and everyone pronounced it the most remarkable

piano ever heard. It had evidently been newly tuned and put in apple-

pie order, but, perfect as it was, I think the real charm lay in the

happiest of all happy faces which leaned over it, as Beth lovingly

touched the beautiful black and white keys and pressed the bright

pedals.

 

"You'll have to go and thank him," said Jo, by way of a joke,

for the idea of the child's really going never entered her head.

 

"Yes, I mean to. I guess I'll go now, before I get frightened

thinking about it." And, to the utter amazement of the assembled

family, Beth walked deliberately down the garden, through the

hedge, and in at the Laurences' door.

 

"Well, I wish I may die if it ain't the queerest thing I ever

see! The pianny has turned her head! She'd never have gone in

her right mind," cried Hannah, staring after her, while the girls

were rendered quite speechless by the miracle.

 

They would have been still more amazed if they had seen what

Beth did afterward. If you will believe me, she went and knocked

at the study door before she gave herself time to think, and when

a gruff voice called out, "come in!" she did go in, right up to

Mr. Laurence, who looked quite taken aback, and held out her hand,

saying, with only a small quaver in her voice, "I came to thank you,

sir, for..." But she didn't finish, for he looked so friendly that

she forgot her speech and, only remembering that he had lost the

little girl he loved, she put both arms round his neck and kissed

him.

 

If the roof of the house had suddenly flown off, the old

gentleman wouldn't have been more astonished. But he liked it.

Oh, dear, yes, he liked it amazingly! And was so touched and

pleased by that confiding little kiss that all his crustiness

vanished, and he just set her on his knee, and laid his

wrinkled cheek against her rosy one, feeling as if he had got his

own little granddaughter back again. Beth ceased to fear him

from that moment, and sat there talking to him as cozily as if

she had known him all her life, for love casts out fear, and

gratitude can conquer pride. When she went home, he walked with

her to her own gate, shook hands cordially, and touched his hat

as he marched back again, looking very stately and erect, like

a handsome, soldierly old gentleman, as he was.

 

When the girls saw that performance, Jo began to dance a jig,

by way of expressing her satisfaction, Amy nearly fell out of the

window in her surprise, and Meg exclaimed, with up-lifted hands,

"Well, I do believe the world is coming to an end."

 

CHAPTER SEVEN

 

AMY'S VALLEY OF HUMILIATION

 

"That boy is a perfect cyclops, isn't he?" said Amy one day,

as Laurie clattered by on horseback, with a flourish of his whip

as he passed.

 

"How dare you say so, when he's got both his eyes? And

very handsome ones they are, too," cried Jo, who resented any

slighting remarks about her friend.

 

"I didn't say anything about his eyes, and I don't see why

you need fire up when I admire his riding."

 

"Oh, my goodness! That little goose means a centaur, and she

called him a Cyclops," exclaimed Jo, with a burst of laughter.

 

"You needn't be so rude, it's only a 'lapse of lingy', as Mr.

Davis says," retorted Amy, finishing Jo with her Latin. "I just

wish I had a little of the money Laurie spends on that horse," she

added, as if to herself, yet hoping her sisters would hear.

 

"Why?" asked Meg kindly, for Jo had gone off in another laugh

at Amy's second blunder.

 

"I need it so much. I'm dreadfully in debt, and it won't be

my turn to have the rag money for a month."

 

"In debt, Amy? What do you mean?" And Meg looked sober.

 

"Why, I owe at least a dozen pickled limes, and I can't pay

them, you know, till I have money, for Marmee forbade my having

anything charged at the shop."

 

"Tell me all about it. Are limes the fashion now? It used

to be pricking bits of rubber to make balls." And Meg tried to

keep her countenance, Amy looked so grave and important.

 

"Why, you see, the girls are always buying them, and unless

you want to be thought mean, you must do it too. It's nothing

but limes now, for everyone is sucking them in their desks in

schooltime, and trading them off for pencils, bead rings, paper

dolls, or something else, at recess. If one girl likes another,

she gives her a lime. If she's mad with her, she eats one before

her face, and doesn't offer even a suck. They treat by turns,

and I've had ever so many but haven't returned them, and I ought

for they are debts of honor, you know."

 

"How much will pay them off and restore your credit?" asked

Meg, taking out her purse.

 

"A quarter would more than do it, and leave a few cents over

for a treat for you. Don't you like limes?"

 

"Not much. You may have my share. Here's the money. Make it

last as long as you can, for it isn't very plenty, you know."

 

"Oh, thank you! It must be so nice to have pocket money! I'll

have a grand feast, for I haven't tasted a lime this week. I felt

delicate about taking any, as I couldn't return them, and I'm

actually suffering for one."

 

Next day Amy was rather late at school, but could not resist the

temptation of displaying, with pardonable pride, a moist brown-paper

parcel, before she consigned it to the inmost recesses of her desk.

During the next few minutes the rumor that Amy March had got twenty-

four delicious limes (she ate one on the way) and was going to

treat circulated through her 'set', and the attentions of her friends

became quite overwhelming. Katy Brown invited her to her next party

on the spot. Mary Kinglsey insisted on lending her her watch till

recess, and Jenny Snow, a satirical young lady, who had basely twitted

Amy upon her limeless state, promptly buried the hatchet and offered

to furnish answers to certain appalling sums. But Amy had not

forgotten Miss Snow's cutting remarks about 'some persons whose noses

were not too flat to smell other people's limes, and stuck-up people

who were not too proud to ask for them', and she instantly crushed

'that Snow girl's' hopes by the withering telegram, "You needn't be

so polite all of a sudden, for you won't get any."

 

A distinguished personage happened to visit the school that

morning, and Amy's beautifully drawn maps received praise, which

honor to her foe rankled in the soul of Miss Snow, and caused Miss

March to assume the airs of a studious young peacock. But, alas,

alas! Pride goes before a fall, and the revengeful Snow turned the

tables with disastrous success. No sooner had the guest paid the

usual stale compliments and bowed himself out, than Jenny, under

pretense of asking an important question, informed Mr. Davis, the

teacher, that Amy March had pickled limes in her desk.

 

Now Mr. Davis had declared limes a contraband article, and

solemnly vowed to publicly ferrule the first person who was found

breaking the law. This much-enduring man had succeeded in banishing

chewing gum after a long and stormy war, had made a bonfire of the

confiscated novels and newspapers, had suppressed a private post

office, had forbidden distortions of the face, nicknames, and

caricatures, and done all that one man could do to keep half a hundred

rebellious girls in order. Boys are trying enough to human patience,

goodness knows, but girls are infinitely more so, especially to

nervous gentlemen with tyrannical tempers and no more talent for

teaching than Dr. Blimber. Mr. Davis knew any quantity of Greek,

Latin, algebra, and ologies of all sorts so he was called a fine

teacher, and manners, morals, feelings, and examples were not

considered of any particular importance. It was a most unfortunate

moment for denouncing Amy, and Jenny knew it. Mr. Davis had

evidently taken his coffee too strong that morning, there was an

east wind, which always affected his neuralgia, and his pupils had

not done him the credit which he felt he deserved. Therefore, to

use the expressive, if not elegant, language of a schoolgirl, "He

was as nervous as a witch and as cross as a bear". The word 'limes'

was like fire to powder, his yellow face flushed, and he rapped on

his desk with an energy which made Jenny skip to her seat with

unusual rapidity.

 

"Young ladies, attention, if you please!"

 

At the stern order the buzz ceased, and fifty pairs of blue,

black, gray, and brown eyes were obediently fixed upon his awful

countenance.

 

"Miss March, come to the desk."

 

Amy rose to comply with outward composure, but a secret fear

oppressed her, for the limes weighed upon her conscience.

 

"Bring with you the limes you have in your desk," was the

unexpected command which arrested her before she got out of her seat.

 

"Don't take all." whispered her neighbor, a young lady of great

presence of mind.

 

Amy hastily shook out half a dozen and laid the rest down before

Mr. Davis, feeling that any man possessing a human heart would relent

when that delicious perfume met his nose. Unfortunately, Mr. Davis

particularly detested the odor of the fashionable pickle, and disgust

added to his wrath.

 

"Is that all?"

 

"Not quite," stammered Amy.

 

"Bring the rest immediately."

 

With a despairing glance at her set, she obeyed.

 

"You are sure there are no more?"

 

"I never lie, sir."

 

"So I see. Now take these disgusting things two by two, and

throw them out of the window."

 

There was a simultaneous sigh, which created quite a little gust,

as the last hope fled, and the treat was ravished from their longing

lips. Scarlet with shame and anger, Amy went to and fro six dreadful

times, and as each doomed couple, looking oh, so plump and juicy, fell

from her reluctant hands, a shout from the street completed the anguish

of the girls, for it told them that their feast was being exulted over

by the little Irish children, who were their sworn foes. This--this

was too much. All flashed indignant or appealing glances at the

inexorable Davis, and one passionate lime lover burst into tears.

 

As Amy returned from her last trip, Mr. Davis gave a portentous

"Hem!" and said, in his most impressive manner...

 

"Young ladies, you remember what I said to you a week ago. I

am sorry this has happened, but I never allow my rules to be infringed,

and I never break my word. Miss March, hold out your hand."

 

Amy started, and put both hands behind her, turning on him an

imploring look which pleaded for her better than the words she could

not utter. She was rather a favorite with 'old Davis', as, of course,

he was called, and it's my private belief that he would have broken

his word if the indignation of one irrepressible young lady had not

found vent in a hiss. That hiss, faint as it was, irritated the

irascible gentleman, and sealed the culprit's fate.

 

"Your hand, Miss March!" was the only answer her mute appeal

received, and too proud to cry or beseech, Amy set her teeth, threw

back her head defiantly, and bore without flinching several tingling

blows on her little palm. They were neither many nor heavy, but that

made no difference to her. For the first time in her life she had

been struck, and the disgrace, in her eyes, was as deep as if he had

knocked her down.

 

"You will now stand on the platform till recess," said Mr. Davis,

resolved to do the thing thoroughly, since he had begun.

 

That was dreadful. It would have been bad enough to go to her

seat, and see the pitying faces of her friends, or the satisfied

ones of her few enemies, but to face the whole school, with that

shame fresh upon her, seemed impossible, and for a second she felt

as if she could only drop down where she stood, and break her heart

with crying. A bitter sense of wrong and the thought of Jenny Snow

helped her to bear it, and, taking the ignominious place, she fixed

her eyes on the stove funnel above what now seemed a sea of faces,

and stood there, so motionless and white that the girls found it

hard to study with that pathetic figure before them.

 

During the fifteen minutes that followed, the proud and sensitive

little girl suffered a shame and pain which she never forgot. To

others it might seem a ludicrous or trivial affair, but to her it was

a hard experience, for during the twelve years of her life she had been

governed by love alone, and a blow of that sort had never touched her

before. The smart of her hand and the ache of her heart were forgotten

in the sting of the thought, "I shall have to tell at home, and they

will be so disappointed in me!"

 

The fifteen minutes seemed an hour, but they came to an end at

last, and the word 'Recess!' had never seemed so welcome to her before.

 

"You can go, Miss March," said Mr. Davis, looking, as he felt,

uncomfortable.

 

He did not soon forget the reproachful glance Amy gave him, as

she went, without a word to anyone, straight into the anteroom,

snatched her things, and left the place "forever," as she passionately

declared to herself. She was in a sad state when she got home, and

when the older girls arrived, some time later, an indignation meeting

was held at once. Mrs. March did not say much but looked disturbed,

and comforted her afflicted little daughter in her tenderest manner.

Meg bathed the insulted hand with glycerine and tears, Beth felt

that even her beloved kittens would fail as a balm for griefs like

this, Jo wrathfully proposed that Mr. Davis be arrested without delay,

and Hannah shook her fist at the 'villain' and pounded potatoes for

dinner as if she had him under her pestle.

 

No notice was taken of Amy's flight, except by her mates, but

the sharp-eyed demoiselles discovered that Mr. Davis was quite

benignant in the afternoon, also unusually nervous. Just before

school closed, Jo appeared, wearing a grim expression as she

stalked up to the desk, and delivered a letter from her mother,

then collected Amy's property, and departed, carefully scraping

the mud from her boots on the door mat, as if she shook the dust

of the place off her feet.

 

"Yes, you can have a vacation from school, but I want you to

study a little every day with Beth," said Mrs. March that evening.

"I don't approve of corporal punishment, especially for girls. I

dislike Mr. Davis's manner of teaching and don't think the girls

you associate with are doing you any good, so I shall ask your

father's advice before I send you anywhere else."

 

"That's good! I wish all the girls would leave, and spoil

his old school. It's perfectly maddening to think of those lovely

limes," sighed Amy, with the air of a martyr.

 

"I am not sorry you lost them, for you broke the rules, and

deserved some punishment for disobedience," was the severe reply,

which rather disappointed the young lady, who expected nothing but

sympathy.

 

"Do you mean you are glad I was disgraced before the whole

school?" cried Amy.

 

"I should not have chosen that way of mending a fault,"

replied her mother, "but I'm not sure that it won't do you more

good than a bolder method. You are getting to be rather conceited,

my dear, and it is quite time you set about correcting it. You

have a good many little gifts and virtues, but there is no need of

parading them, for conceit spoils the finest genius. There is not

much danger that real talent or goodness will be overlooked long,

even if it is, the consciousness of possessing and using it well

should satisfy one, and the great charm of all power is modesty."

 

"So it is!" cried Laurie, who was playing chess in a corner

with Jo. "I knew a girl once, who had a really remarkable talent

for music, and she didn't know it, never guessed what sweet little

things she composed when she was alone, and wouldn't have believed

it if anyone had told her."

 

"I wish I'd known that nice girl. Maybe she would have helped

me, I'm so stupid," said Beth, who stood beside him, listening

eagerly.

 

"You do know her, and she helps you better than anyone else

could," answered Laurie, looking at her with such mischievous

meaning in his merry black eyes that Beth suddenly turned very

red, and hid her face in the sofa cushion, quite overcome by such

an unexpected discovery.

 

Jo let Laurie win the game to pay for that praise of her Beth,

who could not be prevailed upon to play for them after her compliment.

So Laurie did his best, and sang delightfully, being in a particularly

lively humor, for to the Marches he seldom showed the moody side

of his character. When he was gone, Amy, who had been pensive

all evening, said suddenly, as if busy over some new idea,

"Is Laurie an accomplished boy?"

 

"Yes, he has had an excellent education, and has much talent.

He will make a fine man, if not spoiled by petting," replied her

mother.

 

"And he isn't conceited, is he?" asked Amy.

 

"Not in the least. That is why he is so charming and we all

like him so much."

 

"I see. It's nice to have accomplishments and be elegant, but

not to show off or get perked up," said Amy thoughtfully.

 

"These things are always seen and felt in a person's manner

and conversations, if modestly used, but it is not necessary to

display them," said Mrs. March.

 

"Any more than it's proper to wear all your bonnets and gowns

and ribbons at once, that folks may know you've got them," added Jo,

and the lecture ended in a laugh.

 

 

CHAPTER EIGHT

 

JO MEETS APOLLYON

 

"Girls, where are you going?" asked Amy, coming into their

room one Saturday afternoon, and finding them getting ready to

go out with an air of secrecy which excited her curiosity.

 

"Never mind. Little girls shouldn't ask questions," returned

Jo sharply.

 

Now if there is anything mortifying to our feelings when we

are young, it is to be told that, and to be bidden to "run away,

dear" is still more trying to us. Amy bridled up at this insult,

and determined to find out the secret, if she teased for an hour.

Turning to Meg, who never refused her anything very long, she said

coaxingly, "Do tell me! I should think you might let me go, too,

for Beth is fussing over her piano, and I haven't got anything to

do, and am so lonely."

 

"I can't, dear, because you aren't invited," began Meg, but

Jo broke in impatiently, "Now, Meg, be quiet or you will spoil it

all. You can't go, Amy, so don't be a baby and whine about it."

 

"You are going somewhere with Laurie, I know you are. You

were whispering and laughing together on the sofa last night, and

you stopped when I came in. Aren't you going with him?"

 

"Yes, we are. Now do be still, and stop bothering."

 

Amy held her tongue, but used her eyes, and saw Meg slip a

fan into her pocket.

 

"I know! I know! You're going to the theater to see the

_Seven Castles!_" she cried, adding resolutely, "and I shall go,

for Mother said I might see it, and I've got my rag money, and

it was mean not to tell me in time."

 

"Just listen to me a minute, and be a good child," said Meg

soothingly. "Mother doesn't wish you to go this week, because

your eyes are not well enough yet to bear the light of this

fairy piece. Next week you can go with Beth and Hannah, and

have a nice time."

 

"I don't like that half as well as going with you and Laurie.

Please let me. I've been sick with this cold so long, and shut

up, I'm dying for some fun. Do, Meg! I'll be ever so good,"

pleaded Amy, looking as pathetic as she could.

 

"Suppose we take her. I don't believe Mother would mind,

if we bundle her up well," began Meg.

 

"If she goes I shan't, and if I don't, Laurie won't like it,

and it will be very rude, after he invited only us, to go and


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